Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The privates do not have even close to a third of students from public. Most kids, especially at the well-known competitive privates (Sidwell, Potomac, STA, NCS, Maret, Holton, GDS), are private school lifers. A PP attempts above to give a likely percentage breakdown per a few of these schools but it’s generous at best.
+100 Also, a very small percentage of the graduating class enters at 9th grade. The exception is GDS, which admits a lot more kids at 9th than the other top schools.
Anonymous wrote:The privates do not have even close to a third of students from public. Most kids, especially at the well-known competitive privates (Sidwell, Potomac, STA, NCS, Maret, Holton, GDS), are private school lifers. A PP attempts above to give a likely percentage breakdown per a few of these schools but it’s generous at best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sibling didn’t get into a coveted high school that is nationally known. Went to another good private but not nationally known. My mom thought life was over! They wanted my sibling to go so badly to the that school. Ended up at MIT and Harvard so pretty sure it worked out well.
My DH went to Brown and Harvard and has an MD/ PhD. He’s a public school grad too. Do these parents think their kind can’t make it unless they attend private school? There are so many great public schools in the area.
You are in the wrong forum. If you are here, you should understand that those of us who send our kids to private are not interested in sending them to public, for many different reasons. Additionally, you may think the publics in this area are “great” but that is your opinion. I for one don’t agree with you.
Except many people have one child in private and one in public or various other combinations. I think it’s a good reminder to take a collective deep breath and your life or your child’s life is not over if they don’t get in.
yes.
there are two types of private school parents:
1) private at any cost; would never consider public.
2) the ones who do a hybrid of private/public--whether it be for different kids or for different years.
I think at the Big3 schools and/similar it's probably 66/33 towards the private lifers (lifers = maybe not all years at the same private but no time spent in public and often would not even consider public).
I think your numbers are way off. My DCs are at a Big3. All of their friends have been in various private schools since kindergarten. There are definitely kids that enter from public, but not a lot and definitely not 1/3. GDS might be the exception, but I don’t have experience with GDS. I think they take a lot of Deal kids in high school.
They take public kids from VA and MD too… as do all the schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sibling didn’t get into a coveted high school that is nationally known. Went to another good private but not nationally known. My mom thought life was over! They wanted my sibling to go so badly to the that school. Ended up at MIT and Harvard so pretty sure it worked out well.
My DH went to Brown and Harvard and has an MD/ PhD. He’s a public school grad too. Do these parents think their kind can’t make it unless they attend private school? There are so many great public schools in the area.
You are in the wrong forum. If you are here, you should understand that those of us who send our kids to private are not interested in sending them to public, for many different reasons. Additionally, you may think the publics in this area are “great” but that is your opinion. I for one don’t agree with you.
Except many people have one child in private and one in public or various other combinations. I think it’s a good reminder to take a collective deep breath and your life or your child’s life is not over if they don’t get in.
yes.
there are two types of private school parents:
1) private at any cost; would never consider public.
2) the ones who do a hybrid of private/public--whether it be for different kids or for different years.
I think at the Big3 schools and/similar it's probably 66/33 towards the private lifers (lifers = maybe not all years at the same private but no time spent in public and often would not even consider public).
I think your numbers are way off. My DCs are at a Big3. All of their friends have been in various private schools since kindergarten. There are definitely kids that enter from public, but not a lot and definitely not 1/3. GDS might be the exception, but I don’t have experience with GDS. I think they take a lot of Deal kids in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sibling didn’t get into a coveted high school that is nationally known. Went to another good private but not nationally known. My mom thought life was over! They wanted my sibling to go so badly to the that school. Ended up at MIT and Harvard so pretty sure it worked out well.
My DH went to Brown and Harvard and has an MD/ PhD. He’s a public school grad too. Do these parents think their kind can’t make it unless they attend private school? There are so many great public schools in the area.
You are in the wrong forum. If you are here, you should understand that those of us who send our kids to private are not interested in sending them to public, for many different reasons. Additionally, you may think the publics in this area are “great” but that is your opinion. I for one don’t agree with you.
Except many people have one child in private and one in public or various other combinations. I think it’s a good reminder to take a collective deep breath and your life or your child’s life is not over if they don’t get in.
yes.
there are two types of private school parents:
1) private at any cost; would never consider public.
2) the ones who do a hybrid of private/public--whether it be for different kids or for different years.
I think at the Big3 schools and/similar it's probably 66/33 towards the private lifers (lifers = maybe not all years at the same private but no time spent in public and often would not even consider public).
I think your numbers are way off. My DCs are at a Big3. All of their friends have been in various private schools since kindergarten. There are definitely kids that enter from public, but not a lot and definitely not 1/3. GDS might be the exception, but I don’t have experience with GDS. I think they take a lot of Deal kids in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sibling didn’t get into a coveted high school that is nationally known. Went to another good private but not nationally known. My mom thought life was over! They wanted my sibling to go so badly to the that school. Ended up at MIT and Harvard so pretty sure it worked out well.
My DH went to Brown and Harvard and has an MD/ PhD. He’s a public school grad too. Do these parents think their kind can’t make it unless they attend private school? There are so many great public schools in the area.
You are in the wrong forum. If you are here, you should understand that those of us who send our kids to private are not interested in sending them to public, for many different reasons. Additionally, you may think the publics in this area are “great” but that is your opinion. I for one don’t agree with you.
Except many people have one child in private and one in public or various other combinations. I think it’s a good reminder to take a collective deep breath and your life or your child’s life is not over if they don’t get in.
yes.
there are two types of private school parents:
1) private at any cost; would never consider public.
2) the ones who do a hybrid of private/public--whether it be for different kids or for different years.
I think at the Big3 schools and/similar it's probably 66/33 towards the private lifers (lifers = maybe not all years at the same private but no time spent in public and often would not even consider public).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sibling didn’t get into a coveted high school that is nationally known. Went to another good private but not nationally known. My mom thought life was over! They wanted my sibling to go so badly to the that school. Ended up at MIT and Harvard so pretty sure it worked out well.
My DH went to Brown and Harvard and has an MD/ PhD. He’s a public school grad too. Do these parents think their kind can’t make it unless they attend private school? There are so many great public schools in the area.
You are in the wrong forum. If you are here, you should understand that those of us who send our kids to private are not interested in sending them to public, for many different reasons. Additionally, you may think the publics in this area are “great” but that is your opinion. I for one don’t agree with you.
Except many people have one child in private and one in public or various other combinations. I think it’s a good reminder to take a collective deep breath and your life or your child’s life is not over if they don’t get in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sibling didn’t get into a coveted high school that is nationally known. Went to another good private but not nationally known. My mom thought life was over! They wanted my sibling to go so badly to the that school. Ended up at MIT and Harvard so pretty sure it worked out well.
My DH went to Brown and Harvard and has an MD/ PhD. He’s a public school grad too. Do these parents think their kind can’t make it unless they attend private school? There are so many great public schools in the area.
You are in the wrong forum. If you are here, you should understand that those of us who send our kids to private are not interested in sending them to public, for many different reasons. Additionally, you may think the publics in this area are “great” but that is your opinion. I for one don’t agree with you.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, majority of the schools across the country announce in early March.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are applying to 9th grade in a school NOT in the DC area. Yesterday (Mar 2) we got an email from a student ambassador saying hello, if your child has any questions, I'm happy to answer them. FYI, my background is XYZ (club activities, sports etc that sounded very similar to what DC wrote as interests). I am trying to not read too much into it. But, still spent a considerable amount of time wondering whether the school would have their student ambassadors send such an email on Mar 2 if they were going to reject us 3 days later. If this was in fact a blanket email sent to many applicants (inlcuidng those that will be rejected/WLed) that is almost cruel because it is making us hopeful...
Curious how it worked out? Anyone receive similar emails from student ambassadors a couple weeks before decisions are out?